a new measure of trust: why it matters for …...2020/08/05 · likely to buy a new product or...
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A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it Do you know your company’s HX TrustIDTM score? Learn why you should.
Employees are 2.5x more likely to learn new skills on their own time to improve
their work
Customers are 2.4x more likely to receive more value
than they expected
Employees are 2.3x more likely to positively rate or review
their employer online
Customers are 2.3x more likely to purchase from the brand
even if it requires more effort than competitors
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
2
Business leaders know trust is a critical element of the
Human Experience (HX™) that shapes relationships with
customers and employees. Metrics and surveys that
gauge trust are easy to find. What’s missing from all that
conventional wisdom is the most important piece: What can
you do about it?
In the automotive industry, as elsewhere, understanding
the way trust works starts with a look under the hood. You
need to understand the components that go into trust, the
behaviors that fuel those components, and the actions a
business can take not only to identify deficits,
but to address them.
Deloitte has developed a new perspective on trust that
does exactly that. HX TrustID™ maps a direct path from
understanding to action, based on extensive research and
Trust drives behaviors that lead to business results for automotive manufacturers
analysis using data from 7,500 customers and employees of
real-world businesses in the United States. What we found is
that four signals—Humanity, Transparency, Capability, and
Reliability—come together in predictable ways to determine
the level of trust an organization enjoys. The first two
signals, Humanity and Transparency, combine to indicate
an organization’s intent. The second two, Capability and
Reliability, combine to show an organization’s competence.
What did we learn? Automakers have put in hard work on
reliability over the last decades, which earns the industry
high marks from consumers along that front—but employees
still see room for improvement. Transparency is one of the
weakest signals across all consumer product and service
industries. Although automotive fares well here, there are
opportunities for improvement, particularly in pricing and
service. Keep reading to learn more about opportunities in
each signal!
HUMANITY
CAPABILITY
TRANSPARENCY
RELIABILITY
Genuinely caring for the experience and well-being of others
Possessing the means to meet expectations
Openly sharing information, motives,
and choices in plain language
Consistently and dependably delivering upon promises made
Note: Data represents a subset of results from regression analyses conducted based on reported actual past behaviors being true when a signal was rated highly compared to if it was not rated highly (with the 3 other signals held constant). Source: Deloitte HX TrustID Survey, May 2020.
HX lens applied to competence
HX lens applied to intent
FOR AUTOMOTIVE
Employees are 3.0x more likely to go above and beyond what is expected
Customers are 5.9x more likely to buy a new product or service from the brand
Employees are 3.2x more likely to feel motivated to work
Customers are 2.4x more likely to buy from the brand over competitors
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
3
Trust and the automotive industry: where does it stand?
Before diving into differences within the auto industry,
let’s take a look at how it compares as a whole to other
industries. The figure below shows how the automotive
industry compares to other consumer industries including
food and beverage, airlines, apparel, and hospitality across
each of the signals according to respondents of Deloitte’s HX
TrustID survey. This comparison finds automotive lagging
most other industries in demonstrating Humanity but above
the cross-industry average for Reliability and Capability. In
demonstrating Transparency, the auto industry compared
well to some other industries—but it’s still the industry’s
lowest of the four signals.
WHERE DO YOU STAND? IT MATTERS WHERE YOU SIT
Employee signals vary a great deal depending on what kind
of employee we’re talking about. A dealership employee
who interacts with customers has an experience completely
unlike that of an OEM employee on the factory floor or in a
corporate office. Customer-facing employers of dealerships
gave the highest ratings across all four trust signals.
On the other hand, factory employees rated their
companies lower for all four trust signals, far lower for
Transparency, than their corporate or dealer counterparts.
We saw similar patters among warehouse workers in travel
and hospitality industries as well. Automakers may want to
consider ways to set new precedents for establishing trust
with employees in manufacturing roles.
55% 65% 75% 85%
Participants who agreed (%)
Customer signal rating benchmarks Grouped by signal across industries
Overall
Automotive
Food, beverage, other CPG
Grocery and mass merchant
Airlines
Apparel and other retail
Restaurants and food service
Transportation and logistics
Overall (all industries)
Corporate office
Overall (automotive)
Warehouse/factory
Customer facing
Hotels, resorts, casinos
Overall n = 2669 Overall n = 2529 | Automotive n = 321
Percentages represent the portion of customers who believe the most trusted brands in the industry demonstrate each signal. Source: 3000 customer responses (~300 per industry) to Deloitte HX TrustID Survey, May 2020.
Percentages in the benchmark represent the portion of industry employees who indicated they trust their employer and believe their employer demonstrates each signal. Source: 500 employees of automotive brands through Deloitte HX TrustID Survey, May 2020.
Transparency
Humanity
Capability
Reliability
50% 60% 70% 80%
Participants who agreed (%)
Automotive employee signal rating benchmarksGrouped by signal across employee roles
Transparency
Humanity
Capability
Reliability
Navigating the road: The view across each HX TrustID signal
To help improve their signal strength among customers
and employees, we tested numerous high-level activities
brands can do. These activities were grouped into physical,
emotional, financial, and digital categories – learn more
about these dimensions here. Using regression analyses,
we determined which of these activities was most
important for each signal.
What shapes each of those signals within the auto industry,
and what can companies do about each? That’s the focus of
what we’ll examine next.
Humanity: In an industry weak spot, there’s room for improvement
Humanity indicates a belief that an organization genuinely
cares for the experience and well-being of others. This is
one place where the auto industry has room to improve.
Its Humanity signal placed it low among other industries
and among other signals within automotive. Improvement
is worth it, though: Automotive customers surveyed are 2.4
times more likely to purchase from a brand over competitors
when that brand is strong in Humanity, and employees are
3.2 times more likely to feel motivated to work.
Safety, one driver of Humanity, is something the auto
industry can clearly do something about, but not only behind
the wheel. Safety and security in resolving service issues
counts just as much as a new five-star crash rating. For other
drivers of Humanity, the automotive industry may find useful
lessons in hotels and travel companies, who fare much
higher in our benchmark. Organizations in those sectors
have developed ways to build personal and emotional
relationships with customers through comprehensive data
views of the customer across touchpoints, and personalized
interactions based on preferences.
Trust between an organization and its people is no less
important than it is with customers. Humanity is one
place where employees give auto companies higher
marks than customers. It’s worth digging deeper here,
Armed with that knowledge, we turn inward to examine the
benchmark for companies within the auto industry itself—in
the figure below, broken down by customer responses and
employee responses. By comparing your own company’s
signals to this benchmark, you can understand opportunities
for improvement or areas of differentiation.
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
4
Automotive benchmark: Customers
Automotive benchmark: Employees
74% 68%
82% 80%
HUMANITY TRANSPARENCY
CAPABILITY RELIABILITY
74% 68%
82% 80%
HUMANITY TRANSPARENCY
CAPABILITY RELIABILITY
76% 68%
75% 68%
HUMANITY TRANSPARENCY
CAPABILITY RELIABILITY
Percentages in the customer benchmark represent the portion of participants who believe the most
trusted brands in the industry demonstrate each signal. Percentages in the employee benchmark
represent the portion of participants who indicated they trust their employer and believe their
employer demonstrates each signal. An individual company’s trust signals can be compared to the
benchmark. Source: 336 automotive customers and 500 employees of automotive brands through
Deloitte HX TrustID Survey, May 2020.
MEASURING TRUST FOR YOUR COMPANY
70% [Brand]
91% [Brand]
67%[Brand]
69%[Brand]
The illustrative results below give us a view into where a brand has strong signals that could indicate potential strategic advantages or market positioning. It also provides insight into ways a brand could prioritize future investments. In addition, by comparing signal results across different demographics, HX TrustID could further illuminate new opportunities.
By adding four questions to customer and employee surveys, you can compare your brand’s signals to the industry
benchmark. To learn more, click here.
since in companies with a high humanity signal,
employees are almost three times more likely to feel
they have a career there.
Most important actions to have a higher Humanity signal1
Examples of what OEMs could consider
Respectful treatment
Emotional
Expand experience-centric metrics to improve customer and employee journeys at dealerships by reducing the gamesmanship that happens around satisfaction metrics. Add omni-channel capabilities to help dealers understand how to tailor the experience based on different customer need states, such as those seeking an expedited experience because they have already researched extensively online.
Safe resolutions Physical
Following the COVID-19 pandemic, see to it that all brand-affiliated spaces, including dealerships, corporate offices, and factory floors, are getting the essentials right for cleanliness and safety. Click here to learn more about these essentials for customers, employees, and dealership partners.
Actively assist with transitioning vehicle ownership through applications or connected car data. This can help with effective communications around recalls.
Transparency: Low industry-wide marks offer an opening for leadership
Transparency indicates a belief that an organization openly
shares information, motives, and choices in plain language.
Automotive industry organizations do compare favorably
to many other industries in Transparency, which may be
the result of well-known regulatory guidelines on quality,
warranty, and financing from bodies such as the National
Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA)
and the federal Department of Transportation (DOT).
Still, Transparency is the lowest of the four signals for the
auto sector, which means it’s one of the most potentially
rewarding avenues for improvement.
Customers are often loyal to transparent automotive brands,
and Transparency was the signal that drove the largest
number of business outcomes amongst respondents.
When a company is Transparent, customers are 2.3 times
more likely to continue purchasing from the brand after
a data breach, 2.3 times more likely to purchase from it
even if it takes more effort than buying from a competitor,
and 2.2x more likely to make a second purchase even
after an unsatisfactory initial experience, according to our
survey. Automotive employees surveyed who believe their
companies are Transparent are 2.3 times more likely to
positively rate or review their employer online.
Most important actions to have a higher Transparency signal1
Examples of what OEMs could consider
Honest communications
Emotional
Develop a real-time tracking system that allows consumers to clearly see the current status and timing of vehicles during service and repairs.
Implement transparent service and parts pricing by setting cost expectations up front. Recent polls suggest many customers do not trust dealers for service: 70 percent of respondents to one survey did not return to the same dealers they purchased or leased from for service.2
Following service, have technicians send personalized video messages to customers explaining the work that was done, the parts that were needed, and what the cost was.
Prompt updates Physical
Provide dealership employees and customers a more accurate way to track new vehicle shipments in transit from factories. Such a system would alleviate the frustration employees and customers feel when updates aren't available on estimated delivery of vehicles.
Straightforward language
Digital
Grow trust among consumers by using plain language to help them understand how data such as telematics is used. Only 26 percent of consumers prefer that the data a connected car generates be managed by an OEM as opposed to other entities such as governments or insurance companies.3
Unmistakable motives
Financial
Increase price and transaction transparency to reduce the amount of negotiating needed between customers and dealers. 40 percent of customers surveyed in recent Deloitte research cite “pricing issues/haggling” as their most disliked aspect of the dealership experience.4
5
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
Capability: High customer ratings set a high bar for brands
Capability indicates a belief that an organization possesses
the means to meet expectations. Automotive customers
surveyed are 5.9 times more likely to buy a new product or
service from a brand that has a high Capability signal, and
2.7 times more likely to make a repeat purchase. Among
employees, companies with high Capability signals are more
than three times as likely to be on time for work and three
times more likely to go above and beyond expectations.
Clearly, Capability is important for OEMs to get right.
Interestingly, Capability and Reliability are both signals where
customer benchmarks are notably higher than employee
benchmarks. Part of this may be driven by the meaningfully
lower signals from factory employees, but even customer
facing employees at dealers rate these signals lower
than customers. There is work to be done for
automakers to increase their employees belief in
the company’s competence.
Most important actions to have a higher Capability signal1
Examples of what OEMs could consider
Safe use and access
Physical
78 percent of automotive consumers rate customer experience as either a somewhat or very important factor in choosing where to buy a vehicle.5 Work with dealers to refine leading practices on customer service and personalized experiences.
True value Financial
Explore alternative compensation plans for new vehicles. This could also help with transactional efficiency, something we have seen customers desire.6 Different compensation models with a more predictable salary might also attract a more diverse group of sales people.7
Increase transparency for customers returning their vehicles at the end of a lease by clearly explaining vehicle evaluation processes and financial implications.
Competent people Emotional
Forecast workforce needs for high-tech technicians such as those required for EVs, and work with dealers to source qualified candidates, potentially from other industries such as utility companies.
Reliability: Consumers are sold, but brands must convince employees
Reliability indicates a belief that an organization consistently
and dependably delivers upon promises made. Companies
that demonstrate Reliability find surveyed customers are
2.4 times more likely to say they’ve received more value than
they expected.
Employees surveyed rated Reliability as one of the industry’s
lowest signals, so this is an area where brands will need to
focus if they hope to stimulate better workforce action. High
signals for an employer’s Reliability drove a two-and-a-half
times improvement in likelihood of employee respondents
learning new skills on their own time and doubled their
likelihood to go above and beyond. Reliability also correlates
with more than doubling in career commitment, personal
connection, on-time performance, and willingness to share
extra personal information.
Most important actions to have a higher Reliability signal1
Examples of what OEMs could consider
Regular improvement Physical
Explore new ways to implement incremental product improvements, via over the air updates, that offer new features and benefits to ownership.
Consistent quality Physical
Improve digital content and information consistency across omni-channel touchpoints by collaborating with third-party websites and dealer sites. Perception of reliability extends beyond the vehicle to dealer and digital channels, and in a recent Deloitte report, only 55 percent of customers believe that OEM websites meet their expectations.4
Committed promises
Emotional
Leadership should openly share the company’s strategy, product plan, and vision with the corporate, factory and dealer workforce. Be genuinely receptive to feedback.
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
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Fitting the parts together
Knowing how parts contribute to the performance of a whole
is something the automotive industry knows a lot about. In a
sense, HX TrustID is just another exploded-view diagram of a
high-performance engine that needs regular tuning. But the
deeper you look under that hood, the more details emerge.
What starts as a large-scale commitment to building greater
trust can filter, via this new understanding of its components,
into a regular maintenance schedule of fine adjustments that
affects almost every part of an operation.
How does that translate into specific steps for auto industry
brands? Three common themes emerge from our research
on trust signals in automotive:
• Focus on elevating human experiences for all
humans in the ecosystem – not only customers
and employees, but also dealers, partners and
financial stakeholders. Remember that compared to
other industries, automotive companies have weak
Humanity signals. Across all the signals, many of
the top brand actions are focused on the emotional
dimension. Exploring why employees give lower signals
than customers for Capability and Reliably may lead to
profitable discoveries.
• Build on the strength of physical products –
the vehicles will always be important for an OEM’s
reputation, and Capability and Reliability are strong
customer signals in auto. But to move forward, other
norms may have to change, across emotional, digital,
and financial dimensions.
• Seize the opportunity to lead the industry
in Transparency – this low signal for the industry is
a crown waiting for someone to pick it up. The payoff
could be large, as Transparency drives many activities
among the customers and employees who currently
give the industry low marks for it. This is especially true
as OEMs invest in digital services and adjacent mobility
offerings in which data transparency is important.
The findings in this paper are a snapshot of a more richly
detailed data set that exposes much more about trust and
its drivers in different parts of the automotive industry. The
advantage of the HX TrustID approach is that it ties trust to
predictable behaviors, which gives leaders strong insights
about how to change their brands. Measuring trust in this
way reveals where the problem areas lie and what to do
about them. That’s the difference between trust as a
problem and trust as a tool for growth.
A new measure of trust: Why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
A new measure of trust: why it matters for automakers, and how to build it
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About Deloitte
Deloitte refers to one or more of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited, a UK private company limited by guarantee (“DTTL”), its network of member firms, and their related entities. DTTL and each of its member firms are legally separate and independent entities. DTTL (also referred to as “Deloitte Global”) does not provide services to clients. In the United States, Deloitte refers to one or more of the US member firms of DTTL, their related entities that operate using the “Deloitte” name in the United States and their respective affiliates. Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting. Please see www.deloitte.com/about to learn more about our global network of member firms.
This publication contains general information only and Deloitte is not, by means of this publication, rendering accounting, business, financial, investment, legal, tax, or other professional advice or services. This publication is not a substitute for such professional advice or services, nor should it be used as a basis for any decision or action that may affect your business. Before making any decision or taking any action that may affect your business, you should consult a qualified professional advisor. Deloitte shall not be responsible for any loss sustained by any person who relies on this publication.
Copyright © 2020 Deloitte Development LLC. All rights reserved.
Andy SussmanStrategy & [email protected]
Ashley ReichheldCustomer & [email protected]
Jody StidhamCustomer & Marketing [email protected]
Jeff HoodCustomer & [email protected]
Deirdre O’ConnellCustomer & [email protected]
Endnotes1 Deloitte HX TrustID survey: May 2020. Using data from 7,500 customers and employees of real-world businesses, we tested numerous high-level activities brands can do. Using regression analyses, we determined which of these activities most contributed to each signal.
2 https://www.xtime.com/wp-content/uploads/Cox-Automotive-2018-Service-Industry- Study.pdf
3 https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/consumer-business/us- global-automotive-consumer-study-2020-north-america.pdf
4 https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/manufacturing/us- mfg-the-future-is-now.pdf
5 Deloitte Global Automotive Consumer Study, 2018
6 https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/manufacturing/articles/foundation-of-future- automotive-retail-omni-channel-customer-engagement.html
7 https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/insights/us/articles/5222_Changing-lanes-on- talent/DI_Changing_lanes_on_talent.pdf
Mark AllenCustomer & [email protected]
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